389 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
389 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
the
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Southwest Radio Church
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Of the Air L-150
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P.O. Box 1144 Oklahoma City, Okla. 73101
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THE LEGEND(S) OF JOHN TODD
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(reprint from Feb. 2, 1979 Christianity Today)
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EDITORIAL:
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THE BEWITCHING OF THE CHURCHES
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It is an embarrassment to have to write about the John Todd phenomenon (see
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page 38). Several Christian leaders who travel the nation nonetheless tell us
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that Todd is the most talked-about topic of these days. Letters continually
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land on editorial desks, asking in effect, "Is what John Todd is saying true?"
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No, it is not. Todd was not at the pinacle of a witches' conspiracy for
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global conquest as he claims to have been. He has not launched key organiza-
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tions of the charismatic movement or the modern gospel music industry by
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signing a few checks for them from witch headquarters. He has not been to
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many of the places (like Duke University and Viet Nam) he says he has been.
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His memory is fitful. He cannot even seem to remember his right age from
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one reporter to the next. Important details of the story he tells change from
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town to town. In 1973 he was a hero among certain charismatics. By 1978 he
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was well received as a supposedly converted witch by certain strongly anti-
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charismatic fundamentalists. Among them he tended to keep quiet about his
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former charismatic ties.
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Todd has told many people about his conversion under Baptist auspices in
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San Antonio in 1972, but he has not breathed a word about how as early as 1968
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he was a penniless storefront preacher in Phoenix who left trinitarian Pente-
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costalism for the Jesus Only brand. Instead he seems to indicate to his
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modern-day followers than in the sixties he was up to his amulet in witchly
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affairs.
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Affairs? He has had many, according to the evidence. Indeed, even the
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"legitimate" witches blush: he has, they say, given the craft a black mark.
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Some people call Todd an out-and-out liar. Some think he is out to make
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Bible-believing churches look silly--a sort of witch's version of a practical
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joke. Others think he is an emissary of Satan sent to confuse and divide
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Christians. What we find almost incredible, and certainly depressing, is to
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learn of the number of Christians who have believed him. It is for this
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reason that we are devoting so much space to the subject.
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Considerable evidence suggests Todd to be a sick man who must be helped
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before someone is shot to death. He has exploited and abused those who have
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believed in him. What is needed is for people to stop believing in him so
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that he can be helped. In this respect his best friends may be his worst
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enemies. Love and prayer, yes. Submission, no.
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And what of the Christians who have been accepting Todd and his message?
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Realizing how they allowed themselves to be misled, they might become aware of
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how their defective love for brethren with whom they disagree made them easy
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prey for someone like Todd. One can disagree with distinctive charismatic
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doctrines, with political decisions of President Carter, or with the nature of
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certain religious music without blaming it all on witches.
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We can learn too from the response to Todd. Some of us are altogether too
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gullible--too quick to believe negative reports about those with whom we
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disagree, and not quick enough to believe substantiated negative reports about
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people who tell us what we were already inclined to accept. Many unscrupulous
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individuals take advantage of gullible Christians who would not be duped by a
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Jim Jones, but then give credence to the claims of a John Todd.
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Those who accepted a key element in Todd's logic ought to be ashamed. The
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absence of evidence does not prove that one is telling the truth. If Todd
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said he fought in Viet Nam and murdered an officer in Germany but that no
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records are available because the Pentagon destroyed them, then our inability
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to confirm Todd's statements does not become proof that he is telling the
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truth. Records could be lost or destroyed, but in that case the assertion
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remains unsupported.
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After one California pastor discovered some of the truth about Todd, he
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confessed in essence that he had allowed himself to be deceived, and he
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apologized for having had Todd in the pulpit.
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That is the kind of apology that needs to be heard from quite a few
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pulpits.
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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NEWS:
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THE LEGEND(S) OF JOHN TODD
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Is witch-turned evangelist John Todd a prophet sent from God to warn America
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about an impending takeover by sinister forces, or a fraud?
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Fundamentalists across America disagree over the question, charismatic
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leaders are fighting mad, and some supporters are stockpiling food, stashing
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weapons, and building fortified "retreat" hide-aways in preparation for a last
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stand against the hordes of evil.
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Todd, 29, meanwhile has announced that he is through. He told friends in
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the Los Angeles area last month that he has been shot at frequently and that
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his house was firebombed. Therefore, he said, he will take no more speaking
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engagements; he, his wife, and three children will head for a secret retreat
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location.
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"I tried to wake up the people in this country," he is quoted as saying.
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"But they didn't want to listen."
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Until a year ago Todd was unknown in most church circles. On January 1,
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1978, he joined independent Faith Baptist Church in Conoga Park, California.
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That same day he headed East where a speaking tour had been arranged by Pastor
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Tom Berry of the 3,000-member Bible Baptist Church in Elkton, Maryland. The
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tour, which began with two meetings in the Elkton church, was prolonged as
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word spread about Todd's sensational revelations.
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"We've had many great preachers in our pulpit, but there was more talk
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around town after he left than with any other preacher we've had," reported
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Pastor Dino Pedrone of the Open Door Church in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania,
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where Todd addressed more than 1,000 people last February.
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Pedrone, who had invited Todd on Berry's recommendation, recorded Todd's
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talks and circulated copies of them widely. The church, he said, gave Todd
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about $1,000 for a rehabilitation center for ex-witches that Todd supposedly
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was establishing. (Pedrone says he has reservations about Todd now, and that
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he would probably not invite him back.)
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In June, a reporter covered Todd's appearance at a large Baptist church in
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Zionsville, Indiana, and United Press International flashed the story across
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the nation. Meanwhile, taped cassettes of his messages were being circulated
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everywhere, often anonymously. And for every person with reservations about
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Todd, there were others, including Berry, who seemed convinced that Todd's
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messages were authentic.
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Berry has produced a manual, "The Christian During Riot and After Revolu-
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tion," that incorporates Todd's views. It includes a section on "the morality
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of killing," and tells Christians to buy weapons and ammunition, and to build
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retreats.
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As Todd tells it, he was born into witchcraft and became a Grand Druid high
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priest in the Illuminati, a secret group of powerful conspirators, which, Todd
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says, plans a world takeover. He says he was also a member of the "Council of
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Thirteen," one of the chosen few who rank just below the world-ruling Roths-
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child family, Jewish bankers with roots in eighteenth-century Europe who Todd
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claims are really demons.
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Todd says he joined the army to establish covens of witches, that he became
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a decorated Green Beret in Viet Nam, and that he was later transferred to
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Germany, where he killed a former commanding officer in a two-hour shootout in
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Stuttgart. He says the Illuminati got him out of jail and that the Pentagon
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destroyed all his military records.
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The Illuminati, Todd says, have already begun implementing their plans for
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a world takeover. He says an upheaval is slated in the United States in 1979.
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Todd also publicly claims that President Jimmy Carter is the Anti-Christ, and
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that his sister Ruth Carter Stapelton is a leading high priestess of witch-
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craft who taught Todd the finer points of the bewitching arts. The President,
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Todd alleges, takes orders directly "from the Rothschilds."
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According to Todd, Carter would push through legislation that would outlaw
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private ownership of guns, remove tax exemptions from all churches except
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those associated with the National Council of Churches, ban conversion to
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another religion, and prohibit the storing of food and medicine. The Roths-
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childs, Todd alleges, will create a false fuel shortage, confiscate all guns,
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and call for the murder and torture of all Christians (whose names have been
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stored in computers). Congress will be suspended and martial law established,
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with one policeman for every five people. There will be economic chaos.
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To survive, Todd says, Christians must arm themselves, build up food
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supplies to last five years, hide in wilderness fortresses, and kill
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attackers.
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The worldwide conspiracy is so extensive that Christians can trust no one
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today, not even America's best-known evangelical preachers and lay leaders,
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says Todd. He charges that while he was a high-ranking witch he sent an $8
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million check to Pastor Chuck Smith of famed Calvary Chapel in Costa Mesa,
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California, to set up the Maranatha music company and launch "Jesus rock"
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music. (Smith denied the charge in his church publication.)
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Todd claims that he delivered $35 million to founder Demos Shakarian of the
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Full Gospel Businessmen's Fellowship; he alleges that Shakarian is a leading
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figure in the Illuminati. The witches, Todd says, also helped build Melody-
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land Christian Center in Anaheim, whose pastor--Ralph Wilkerson--is part of
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the conspiracy. Todd similarly implicates the CBN and PTL Christian tele-
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vision networks and their leaders. He hints that glossolia, itself, is an
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invention of witches.
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In a recent attack, Todd alleged that television preacher Jerry Falwell, a
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non-charismatic, was "bought off" with a $50 million check during a trip to
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the Middle East. (When some of his hard-core followers expressed dismay, Todd
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tried to have the remark erased from the tapes, according to an informant.)
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Falwell's church, Thomas Road Baptist in Lynchburg, Virginia, last month
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returned Todd's fire with a blistering editorial against Todd in the church
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newspaper, which is sent to many of Falwell's TV viewers.
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Incredible as it all seems, thousands of church members, including a number
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of pastors, have apparently accepted all or most of Todd's message as gospel
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truth--despite statements of outrage and denial by charismatic leaders, along
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with protests by experts in occult studies that Todd's accounts are simply
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false.
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Most of Todd's listeners have assumed that he is also telling the truth
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about his conversion from witchcraft to Christianity, an event that took place
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in San Antonio in October, 1972, according to his testimony in numerous
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churches last year.
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He says he embraced Christianity after reading a Chick Publications tract,
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seeing the movie _The Cross and the Switchblade_, and being exposed to the
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ministries of a Christian coffeehouse and the Castle Hills Baptist Church.
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The church pastor at that time, Jack Taylor, affirms that Todd indeed had made
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a profession of faith, though little else was known about him. Taylor later
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uncovered discrepancies in Todd's accounts and since has become a Todd critic.
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'STRANGE THINGS HAPPEN'
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"Strange things began to happen" when Todd returned to California from his
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first eastern tour in early April, 1978, says Pastor Roland Rasmussen of Faith
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Baptist in Canoga Park. Todd claimed several times that he had been shot at
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in the vicinity of the church parking lot.
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Todd told Rasmussen that he had gone through a period of backsliding. He
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said he had sold occult books from a store he ran for a while in Dayton, Ohio,
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but emphasized he had never gone back into occult activity.
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Then one of Todd's friends in the congregation, occult researcher Mike
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Grifin, informed the pastor about a startling discovery. Griffin had borrowed
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from Todd a recording made from a television newscast of a meeting the ex-
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witch had conducted in Ventura, California. Listening to it privately,
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Griffin heard more than the brief newscast since the taped cassette had also
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been used to record an earlier meeting where Todd was instructing would-be
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witches how to mix potions and cast spells. Todd's own statements during the
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recorded class session indicate that it was held on March 3, 1976, in the
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Dayton store known as The Witches Caldron [sic], and that he had been involved
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in occult practices since at least the previous March.
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(On the tape, Todd--his witch name is Lance Collins--makes such statements
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as "I feel witchcraft is more powerful than Christianity" and "we're not
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Christians.")
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Rasmussen called a meeting of the deacons on May 27, when they confronted
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Todd with excerpts of the tape. The pastor also reminded Todd that he carried
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no gun--contrary to what Todd had told an Indiana audience from personal
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knowledge a short time earlier. Todd, offering virtually no explanation,
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shrugged and left--after retrieving his automatic pistol that tumbled from his
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hip pocket when he got up from his chair. On the next night, the church voted
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unanimously to eject Todd from membership and remove endorsement of his
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ministry.
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Rasmussen was introduced to Todd in June, 1977, by Jack Chick of Chick
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Publications in nearby Cucamonga, and Rasmussen was in turn introduced to
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Berry. Chick, a Baptist, says he first heard Todd in 1973 at a meeting of
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charismatic evangelist Doug Clark's "Amazing Prophecies" group. Impressed,
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Chick featured Todd in several Christian comic-book stories. Despite the
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controversy, he still believes Todd, though he admits to "not knowing what to
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believe" about Todd's charge that prominent charismatic ministers are agents
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of the Illuminati.
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SUPPORT FROM CLERGY
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Berry and four other prominent Baptist ministers, along with several
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associates, met with Todd at Villa Baptist Church in Indianapolis. They later
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released a paper reaffirming their beliefs that Todd is genuinely born again,
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that he is sincerely trying to serve Christ, and that his accounts of
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experiences in the ruling circles of witchcraft "are reliable reports."
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Todd, however, hit the road again with a heavy schedule of meetings, some
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of them arranged by Berry. At a closed meeting of nearly 3,000 pastors and
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lay leaders hosted by Berry in a Maryland restaurant, Todd again recounted his
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experiences as a witch and as a member of the Illuminati. He also retraced
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his conversion in 1972 in San Antonio.
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But Todd apparently didn't tell everything. CHRISTIANITY TODAY has
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learned, for example, that Todd showed up in Phoenix early in 1968 as a 19-
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year-old storefront preacher with a wife named Linda and her four-year-old
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child Tanya. While staying with relatives, he called Pastor James Outlaw of
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the Jesus Name Church and asked to be rebaptized. Todd said he had been
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studying the teachings of William Brannam and wanted to be rebaptized in the
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name of Jesus only. (Brannam taught that God manifests himself in different
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ways but is always Jesus.)
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Todd testified to Outlaw that he had been a witch while in "the navy" but
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was converted while attending a storefront Pentacostal church in southern
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California.
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Outlaw says Todd disappeared and returned months later without Linda. Todd
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explained that God had given them a prophecy to split up and seek other mates.
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The pastor says he and his wife admonished Todd about the error of such
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thinking but nevertheless helped him get a job as a busboy in a Mexican
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restaurant. Then Todd disappeared again and did not return until late 1972 or
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early 1973. Outlaw introduced Todd this time to Pentecostal Ken Long, a local
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leader of the Jesus movement who operated the "Open Door" coffeehouse.
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Long, who has since switched from Pentecostalism and become pastor of Bible
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Heritage Free Will Baptist Church in Phoenix, enlisted Todd as a coffeehouse
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worker. "Things began happening," declares Long. "John Todd did miracles."
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Long says he watched Todd heal a handicapped youth's leg.
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On one such excursion, Long and Todd met Sharon Garver in San Antonio. She
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returned with them to Phoenix and married Todd in August, 1973. Meanwhile,
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Long says he began getting reports that Todd was trying to seduce teenage
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girls at the coffeehouse. (Two later confessed that they had sexual relations
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with him.) Four girls revealed that Todd wanted them to form a witches coven
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and that he told them that he was still in witchcraft. Long later removed
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Todd from the coffeehouse ministry.
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Todd drifted from job to job and then struck paydirt. He gave his
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"testimony" for a Christian TV station. He claimed that the Illuminati were
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financing some fundamentalist churches, that he had been the Kennedy family's
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personal warlock ("John F. Kennedy was not really killed; I just came back
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from a visit with him on his yacht"), and that he had witnessed the stabbing
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of a girl by Senator George McGovern in an act of sacrifice.
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More than $25,000 was pledged during the telethon and management offered to
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employ Todd--who was then, reportedly, packing a .38 snub-nosed revolver. He
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eventually declined. Doug Clark heard of Todd and invited him to appear on
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his "Amazing Prophecies" show. Overnight Todd became a hit in charismatic
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circles in southern California, and he and Sharon moved to Santa Ana.
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Soon the Todds were hosting dozens of youg people at a weekly Bible study
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in their home. A few young people were converted, said Sharon, but there were
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distressing things, too. She said that Todd was blending elements of witch-
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craft with his Christian teaching ad seducing some of the girls, several of
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whom confided in leaders at Melodyland Christian Center. In an ugly confron-
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tation with Melodyland church leaders around Christmas, 1973, Todd denied the
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charges and stormed out.
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A MATTER OF RECORDS
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Clark denounced Todd on TV, and the Todds headed back to San Antonio.
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Throughout their marriage Todd had been using drugs, says Sharon, and he was
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dropping in and out of witchcraft. He spoke of trying to reinlist in the army
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(he had served from February, 1969, to July, 1970), and he obtained his army
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records. (Although he is still telling audiences that the records do not
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exist, CHRISTIANITY TODAY has obtained a copy that shows he spent only twenty-
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five days overseas--in Germany, not Viet Nam.)
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Family members say that Todd was witnessing to Sharon's relatives about
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Christ but at the same time was trying to enlist them in witchcraft,
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apparently for sexual reasons. He made Sharon's teenage sister pregnant,
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alleged both Sharon and the sister. The latter says she finally received
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Christ several months ago, but had been turned off to Christianity almost
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completely by Todd. (Todd declined to be interviewed for this report.)
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Finally, the lanky 6'4" Todd left Sharon in mid-1974 and went to Dayton
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where he met Sheila Spoonmore. The pair apparently lived together for about
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two years before getting married. During this period Todd operated The
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Witches Caldron [sic]. He attracted the attention of local authorities when
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parents of teenage girls complained he was corrupting their children's morals.
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One 16-year-old finally agreed to tell the police what was going on at Todd's
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house and store. She said that witchcraft initiation rites were carried out
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in the nude, and that Todd had forced her to have oral sex.
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Todd pleaded guilty to contributing to the unruliness of a minor and served
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two months of a six-month sentence in a county institution. Chick and a
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lawyer succeeded in getting him released early for medical reasons. (He was
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said to be having seizures.) He was placed on five years' probation which he
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promptly broke by leaving the state. He travelled to Phoenix, where Ken Long
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got him a job as a cook in a steak house. "Todd swore he was out of witch-
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craft for good," says Long, "but after only two weeks on the job he was
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talking to two girls about plans to open up an occult bookstore." Todd,
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however, abruptly left town, and Long has not seen him since.
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Todd's occult operation in Dayton held a temporary charter as the Watchers
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Church of Wicca under the National Church and School of Wicca, headquartered
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in New Bern, North Carolina. Todd appealed to Wicca head Gavin Frost and
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civil rights specialist Isaac Bonnawitz [sic] to help him with the police
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problems in Dayton. Both men investigated quietly, and Frost announced their
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findings in the Wicca news letter:
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"We found absolutely no foundation for the charges of persecution made by
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the Todds; rather, we found a very negative situation conducted by an ex-
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Satanist, ex-Christian priest as a cover for sexual perversion and drug abuse.
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Todd is armed and dangerous, and any activity by him should immediately be
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reported to the Church of Wicca."
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Todd's police record shows that a felony warrant was issued against him in
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New Mexico for passing a bad check. He was arrested in Columbus in 1968 for
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malicious destruction of property. He was treated for drug overdose at an
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army installation in Maryland in 1969. A warrant for his arrest awaits him in
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Ohio, as does a judgement against him for $22,000 in a defamation case.
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Todd claims many of the police are associated with Freemasonry, an Illumi-
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nati organization, and therefore should be considered enemies. In an inter-
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view, Berry said he thinks the theory is a plausible one. The freemasonry is
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what forced Strom Thurmond off the Bob Jones University board after Todd
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spread the word that the senator is a mason.
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Todd was given psychiatric examinations twice while in the army. His
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records indicate evidence of an unstable home background and possible brain
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damage as a result of beatings. The second examination a few months later
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labeled his malady "emotional instability with pseudologica phantastica."
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Todd finds it difficult to tell reality from fantasy, says a medical report.
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It spoke of homocidal threats he had made on another, false suicide reports,
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and a severe personality disturbance. It saw no hope for change and recom-
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mended Todd's discharge.
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Pastor Clifford Wicks of the 850-member Grace Brethren Church in Somerset,
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Pennsylvania, cancelled Todd after he delivered the third of four scheduled
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messages in his church last month.
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Wicks said reaction to Todd was mixed and that some persons experienced
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revival. However, Wicks reported one particularly disturbing reaction to
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Todd. Some people in the community, expressing a sense of dismay and help-
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lessness at the coming events as predicted by Todd, said: "Pastor, we will
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not allow them to torture our families; we have decided that we will kill our
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children before that happens."
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EDWARD E. PLOWMAN
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______________________________________________________________________________
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The above was reprinted by permission, and may not be reprinted without per-
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mission from Christianity Today. For subscription information to Christianity
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Today, write P.O. Box 354, Dover, N.J. 07801.
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********************
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CONCLUSION: Without a doubt, John Todd has one of the most amazing stories
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about the international Satanic conspiracy of any person reportedly speaking
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for the Lord Jesus Christ today. In 1978 we were flooded with cassette tapes
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of his talks in churches, but free speech is free indeed within the auditorium
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of a local church. The complexion changes when rigidly put in black type on
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white paper, or broadcast over public communications media. Therefore, when
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we were deluged with requests to present Todd's message over our radio
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ministry, we asked him to document everything he had said. After the initial
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contact, when Mr. Todd agreed to be a guest speaker, providing documentation
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would be given, we never heard from him again. Anyone can accuse others of
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anything, or promote himself to any desired degree, as long as he is not asked
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to prove it. It was apparent to us from the questions fielded by Mr. Todd
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that he had been associated with witchcraft; all other claims and statements
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had to be accepted strictly on faith that he was telling the truth. Anyone
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making charges against so many prominent personalities should be willing to
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offer documentation. We have no vendetta against John Todd. We reprinted the
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preceding article because we were deluged by requests for information about
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him. Perhaps the information from _Christianity Today_ will encourage him to
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refute these accusations with proof of past activities and associations.
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"Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of
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God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world." (I John 4:1)
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Extra copies: ___ 1 free upon request
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___ 20 copies for an offering of $3.00
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___ 50 copies for an offering of $5.00
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___ 150 copies for an offering of $10.00
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___ 1000 copies for an offering of $50.00
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Southwest Radio Church
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P.O. Box 1144
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Oklahoma City, OK 73101
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